This technical drawing is part of Abushady's patent for "Improvements in and relating to Combs for Beehives," and depicts a removable aluminum honeycomb. I became aware of Abushady's patents for beehive improvements while conducting routine online research. I discovered a scan of the image on Wikipatents, which no longer exists. Later, mention of the patent reappeared online and I was able to locate and obtain a copy of the patent itself from an antiquarian book dealer.

The patent application is dated July 24, 1919, London:

The patent was accepted and registered on September 9, 1920, and printed for His Majesty's Stationery Office, by Love & Malcomson, Ltd.,1920.

Abushady is best known in Egypt for his influential poetry journal Apollo (1932–34), a vehicle for experimental Modern Arabic poetry that he designed, edited and published. He launched a group of poets known as "Apollo's Society" or The Apollo School (Arabic: مدرسة أبولو‎) that included artists and poets from beyond Egypt's borders.

Abushady lived and worked in a milieu that included visual artists as well as writers and poets, many of whom produced drawings and illustrations for his numerous publications. One of these was the well-known Persian cartoonist Mohamed Fridon (or Fereydūn (Persian: فریدون‎). This caricature, which shows Abushady as a polymath or jack of all trades, has been reproduced in scholarly articles about the Apollo poets:

I discovered the original drawing, shown framed below, and secured it in the family archive: